In suburban and residential neighborhoods like Alsip, many staircase fall injuries occur in settings where safety obligations are ongoing—condos and apartments, multi-unit entrances, shared stairwells, and homes with seasonal wear-and-tear. Insurers frequently argue the hazard was temporary, not known, or that the injured person “should have seen it.”
That’s why the outcome often depends on practical details such as:
- Whether the handrail was secure and reachable (and consistent in height)
- Whether the stairs had adequate lighting, especially in stairwells and entryways
- Whether treads were worn, uneven, or had loose edges
- Whether debris, clutter, or carpeting placement created an unsafe step
- Whether anyone reported the issue before your fall
When those facts are documented early, it becomes harder for the defense to minimize the risk or shift blame.


